Cliff Dwellers

Cliff Dwellers

Meet the artist

G
George Bellows1882–1925American

Dates

1913

Specifications

Dimensions
102 × 107 cm

About the Artwork

George Bellows captures the teeming, irrepressible energy of New York's Lower East Side on a sweltering summer day. People spill from every surface of the tenement buildings: they crowd the stoops, lean from windows, drape across fire escapes, and fill the narrow street below. Overhead laundry flutters between buildings while a street vendor pushes a cart through the throng. A trolley car heading toward Vesey Street is just visible in the background.

Painted during an era of explosive urban growth, when New York's population swelled from 1.5 to 5 million between 1870 and 1915, the canvas documents the lived reality of immigrant neighborhoods where Italian, Jewish, Irish, and Chinese families crowded into dense tenement blocks. The title wryly compares these urban dwellers to the ancient Pueblo peoples who built homes in cliff faces, drawing a pointed parallel between primal survival and modern city life.

Bellows used his most complex application of the Maratta color system here, a method that assigned musical note values to colors. Three distinct color chords govern different areas of the canvas, creating a visual rhythm that matches the scene's chaotic vitality. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art acquired the painting just three years after its completion, recognizing it immediately as a landmark of the Ashcan School.

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